Md. Marine Killed in Iraq Crash

As a teenager, Matthew Snyder seemed perhaps a bit short to be a Marine. But people who knew him said last night that the young Carroll County man made up for whatever he might have lacked in height.

"He had all that spunk and desire," said David F. Brown, who once coached Snyder in a church basketball league. "On the court, he made up for everything."

Lance Cpl. Matthew A. Snyder of Finksburg died Friday from a noncombat-related vehicle accident in Iraq's Anbar province, the Pentagon announced yesterday. Snyder, 20, had been in Iraq since last month, the Marine Corps said.

"He was a wonderful son, and we're very proud of him," an aunt said last night, speaking for the family. "And he served our country well."

A neighbor recalled Snyder yesterday as "just a fine young man" who would help her with chores. Erma Dewitt said that she liked to pay children for their helpfulness but that he acted more out of a spirit of neighborliness than out of desire for monetary reward.

Snyder's character showed in the way he took care of things, she said. Once, when he came by to let the neighbor's dog out, he found a blacksnake in the garage.

"He wouldn't kill it," Dewitt said. He just took it outside."

Dewitt said Snyder did not strike her as someone with the physical stature of a Marine.

But "he had high objectives for life and wanted to serve his country," she said.

He "was going to take the Marines on and get through boot camp," which is celebrated for its physical demands. "And he did it," Dewitt said.

When she heard of his desire to join the armed forces, she said, she suggested to Snyder's mother that he pursue an enlistment that might be safer and less demanding.